Indeed Susan. Tango-L is well-known if not notorious for a history of flames 
and personal attacks, though it seems to me it's been better in the last couple 
of years. But there is something unique about the online communication medium 
that I think facilitates asocial communication behavior. I suspect it's similar 
to road rage phenomenon where the impersonality of being protected in your car 
seems to allow people to do aggressive things they'd never do face-to-face. 

In my past life in the corporate world, we did lots of coaching/training on 
appropriate electronic communication. Other than the impersonality inherent in 
the medium, there's also the lack of visual cues that are known to comprise 70% 
or so of the message in F2F conversations.


So the general guidelines to keep things productive and civil:
* Avoid sarcasm. Without visual cues of facial expression and tone of voice, it 
doesn't usually come through well.
* Stick to the facts - address the issue not the person.
* Avoid labeling
* If something strikes you emotionally, rather than assume you know the intent 
and understand the message, ask for clarification before responding (active 
feedback communication 101)


In the tango world, things get pretty squishy. We're dealing with such subtlety 
of movement, attitude, perception, and emotion/feeling that having a clear 
discussion is asking for the impossible. Still we try.


And one other thing, be careful about over-generalizing. Whether talking about 
cliques or leaders/followers attitudes towards their partners or any other of 
the issues that we love to try to understand, it's easy to find specific 
examples in your experience or from what you've heard (rumors and urban myths 
are a whole other problem) to support just about any thesis you have. But it 
also doesn't take much to find examples that contradict/oppose the thesis. 


Jay Rabe  Portland
===========================
> Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2011 14:01:46 -0800
> From: [email protected]
> 
> ... ... ...  So, maybe it's not gender related, maybe it's not even 
> ego related, and maybe it's not even tango dancer related, rather, it's more 
> communication 101 related..... which, I don't know about you, but I can 
> always 
> improve upon.

                                          
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